a printable version of the annual report

Transcription

a printable version of the annual report
2013
Annual Report
to members
Administrative Board, Program Directors, and Cornell Faculty
Administrative Board
Edward W. Rose III—
Chairman
President and Owner,
Cardinal Investment
Company
Ellen G. Adelson
Social Worker in private
practice (Cornell ‘58)
Philip H. Bartels
Attorney, Shipman &
Goodwin LLP (Cornell ‘71)
Andrew H. Bass*
Ph.D., Professor,
Neurobiology and
Behavior, Associate Vice
Provost for Research,
Cornell University,
(ex officio)
Robert B. Berry
Golden-winged Warblers (cover)
have suffered one of the steepest population declines of any
songbird. In December 2012 the
Cornell Lab of Ornithology and
partners published a conservation
plan (above) that calls for restoring early successional habitat
bordered by mature forest (prime
golden-wing breeding grounds,
pictured on back cover) on more
than 1 million acres nationally.
Ultimately, the plan aims to grow
the current golden-wing population by 50% by the year 2050.
This page: Golden-winged
Warbler by Laurie Johnson
Retired CEO, U.S. Liability
Insurance Companies
James R. Carpenter
Russell B. Faucett
General Partner,
Barrington Partners
John H. Foote
Co-Founder, TransCore
(Cornell ’74)
Alan J. Friedman
Ph.D., Consultant in
museum development and
science communication
Ron R. Hoy*
Ph.D., Professor,
Neurobiology and
Behavior, Cornell
University, (ex officio)
Imogene P. Johnson
Civic Leader,
Conservationist,
S. C. Johnson Company
(Cornell ’52)
Austin H. Kiplinger
President and CEO,
Wild Birds Unlimited
Chairman, Kiplinger
Washington Editors
(Cornell ’39)
Judson Dayton
Kathryn M. Kiplinger
Investor, Okabena
Investment Services
Louisa Duemling
Civic Leader
(Cornell ‘58)
V. Richard Eales
Lead Director,
Range Resources
(Cornell ‘58)
Alexander Ellis III
General Partner,
Rockport Capital
Catherine Smith Falck
Civic Leader
Co-Head, U.S. Corporate
Banking, Scotia Capital
(The Bank of Nova Scotia)
(Cornell ’79)
Linda R. Macaulay
Cornell Lab of
Ornithology Research
Associate, Birdsong
Recordist
Claudia Madrazo de
Hernández
Founder and Director,
La Vaca Independiente
Program Directors and Faculty
William K. Michener
Ph.D., Professor and
Director of e-Science
Initiatives, University of
New Mexico
Edwin H. Morgens
Founder and Chairman,
Morgens, Waterfall,
Vintiadis, & Co. Inc.
(Cornell ’63)
H. Charles Price
Retired Chairman,
H.C. Price Company
Inge T. Reichenbach
Principal, Reichenbach
Consulting LLC
Maria Schneider
Jazz Composer
Julie Schnuck
Civic Leader (Cornell ‘70)
Brandon Southall
President, Southall
Environmental Associates
(SEA), Inc.
Jennifer P. Speers
Conservationist,
Philanthropist
Joseph H. Williams
Director and Retired
Chairman, The Williams
Companies, Inc.
David W. Winkler*
Ph.D., Professor, Ecology
and Evolutionary Biology,
Cornell University,
(ex officio)
* Cornell University Faculty
John W. Fitzpatrick*
Ph.D., Louis
Agassiz Fuertes Director;
Professor of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology
Paul Allen
Director, Technology and
Information Management
Rick Bonney
Director, Program
Development and
Evaluation
John Bowman
Director, Multimedia
Productions
Adriane Callinan
Mary Guthrie
Director, Corporate
Marketing Partnerships
Steve Kelling
Director, Information
Science
Walter Koenig*
Ph.D., Senior Scientist, Bird
Population Studies and
Neurobiology and Behavior
Irby Lovette*
Ph.D., Director, Fuller
Evolutionary
Biology Program; Associate
Professor, Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology
Senior Director,
Administration and
Business Operations
Aaron Rice
Miyoko Chu
Amanda Rodewald*
Ph.D., Senior Director,
Communications
Christopher Clark*
Ph.D., Imogene
Powers Johnson Senior
Scientist, Neurobiology
and Behavior
André Dhondt*
Ph.D., Director, Bird
Population Studies; Edwin
H. Morgens Professor of
Ornithology, Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology
Janis Dickinson*
Ph.D., Arthur A.
Allen Director of Citizen
Science; Associate
Professor, Natural
Resources
Ph.D., Director, Bioacoustics
Research Program
Ph.D., Director,
Conservation Science;
Robert F. Schumann Faculty
Fellow, Natural Resources
Sean Scanlon
Senior Director,
Development and
Philanthropy
Scott Sutcliffe
Director of Annual Fund
and Stewardship
Nancy Trautmann
Ph.D., Director, Education
Michael Webster*
Ph.D., Director, Macaulay
Library; Robert G. Engel
Professor of Ornithology,
Neurobiology and Behavior
* Cornell University Faculty
A
John Fitzpatrick
a message from
t the heart of science is the curiosity to ask a big question, combined with the courage, cleverness, and determination to find the answer. This is what we do at
the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. We are an institute of
exploration, fueled by intense passion for nature and
the desire to understand better how it works—in the
air, in habitats around the world, even in the ocean.
Our explorations this year took us to every continent—
on the slopes of the Himalayas, in mountain forests of
the Andes, on ships plying the Bering Sea. Our work is
inspired by a desire to understand how humans affect
natural systems, and how we can reduce our impact.
And it’s fueled by innovation. Discovery often requires
figuring out new ways to get at a question. We invent
new hardware that takes acoustic monitoring to larger
scales; new web applications that grow citizen science
through crowdsourcing; complex machine-learning algorithms that enable unprecedented big-data analysis.
Our scope is global, but we do not have offices in
far-flung countries. Rather, we teach people around
the world about birds and conservation through distance-learning and web portals. Our citizen-science
networks reach into nearly every nation of the world,
allowing us to monitor birds everywhere, in real time.
Information is our currency, our lifeblood. But our
mission begins with “interpret and conserve.” These
are vital action verbs, and we are committed to real action on the ground.
Gunnison Sage-Grouse by Gerrit Vyn
We pursue daring lines of inquiry. Revelations about
birds and nature are our most important measure of
success. Seemingly every month, one of our scientists,
students, or staff returns from some corner of the
globe with a discovery—audio, video, or data about
bird behavior never before heard, seen, or understood.
One afternoon at Sapsucker Woods last summer, I reflected on what was going on within a few feet of my
office. In a meeting next door, a Nature Conservancy
ecologist and our eBird staff were working on an innovative, targeted conservation solution using our
revolutionary bird distribution models. Down the hall,
a science educator was collaborating with web designers to create a new kind of interactive, open-access biology course. Upstairs, a team of computer scientists
dug into the knotty but essential problem of generating accurate abundance maps from eBird data. Downstairs, our multimedia producers met with a director
from Audubon on a project to raise public awareness
about Greater Sage-Grouse and the imperiled western
sagebrush ecosystem.
There are simply no other institutions like this one. We
draw on a diverse arsenal of passions and talents, integrating the energies of young students with the visions
of experienced professionals. Often, the Lab of Ornithology feels like an orchestra to me. Flutes and violins,
drums and trumpets are all such different instruments,
yet by each player working hard individually, the result
comes together to produce amazing music. The Lab
combines ecological scientists and computer scientists with citizen scientists, flourishes with educators
and internet programmers, rings in with bioacoustic
oceanographers and multimedia videographers, all of
whom are united with the common mission to interpret and conserve the earth’s biological diversity.
You are an integral part of this orchestra. Through
your passion and generosity, your unwavering intellectual and financial support, you make everything
on the pages that follow possible. Please turn the page
and explore some of the questions you enabled us to
ask in the past year, and the answers we discovered.
John W. Fitzpatrick
Louis Agassiz Fuertes Director
3
How Can We
Save a Species?
Through research, planning, and action.
Igniting a Golden-winged Warbler Recovery
Golden-winged Warbler by Marty Piorkowski
Optimizing conservation
through science
Enlisting citizen scientists in a
large-scale survey
Conservation is best—most effective, and most
efficient—when it’s guided by good science. The
Cornell Lab of Ornithology adds authoritative
knowledge and rigorous planning to conservation efforts for species in decline.
Such was the case for the Golden-winged Warbler, a species that has suffered one of the steepest
population declines of any songbird over the past
45 years. In the late 1990s, the Cornell Lab and
several partners convened the Golden-winged
Warbler Working Group and launched a massive
effort to explore what could be done to foster a
recovery. This past year the group published one
of the most thorough research-backed conservation strategies ever produced. And already, new
pairs of breeding golden-wings are showing up in
new places where the strategy has been initially
implemented.
As a first step, the working group needed to ascertain where Golden-winged
Warblers still existed. How do you count birds in 17 states and Canada? Get
a lot of friends to help. The Cornell Lab put out the word on citizen-science
networks—such as eBird—to recruit more than 300 birders into one of the
largest-scale bird surveys for a single species. Conducted from 1999 to 2006,
the Golden-winged Warbler Atlas Project discovered that the golden-wing
range no longer ran contiguously from the Midwest to the East, but had now
receded to two isolated sub-populations centered in Minnesota/Wisconsin
and along the Appalachian Mountains.
From 1999 to 2006, the Cornell
Lab led an atlas project that used
field surveys by citizen scientists
and professional biologists (such as
Cornell Lab researchers Sara Barker
and Ron Rohrbaugh, at right) to create
a detailed, up-to-date golden-wing
range map. The project discovered that
golden-wing distribution had receded
to two disjunct sub-populations in the
Upper Midwest and Appalachians.
4
LEGEND
Breeding Ranges
Former
Current (2011)
Discovering a genetic link to habitat
Next the working group needed to understand what kind of habitat best promoted Golden-winged Warbler reproduction. In the field, the Cornell Lab
helped to lead a research initiative that discovered prime golden-wing habitat wasn’t just open shrublands (as previously thought), but ideally shrublands or young forest bordered by mature forest and set in the context of
a mostly forested landscape. Meanwhile back at the Cornell Lab, Fuller Postdoctoral Fellow Rachel Vallender conducted pioneering genetic analyses of bird blood samples
that led to the discovery of cryptic hybrids—individual
birds that look like pure golden-wings, but show genetic
evidence of past hybridization in their family history. This
discovery helped scientists better understand the dynamics
of hybridization, and how Golden-winged Warblers, Bluewinged Warblers, and their hybrids may use slightly different habitats. As hybridization with blue-wings is a prime
factor in golden-wings’ disappearance as a species, this link
between habitat and genetic health was a crucial find.
An Emergency
Response for Orangebreasted Falcons
The Cornell Lab and partners published two regional guides with prescriptions for land managers to create
golden-wing habitat (above, photo by Laurie Johnson).
A plan for recovery
In December 2012, the Cornell Lab and the Golden-winged Warbler Working
Group published the Golden-winged Warbler Conservation Plan, a master blueprint to create an additional 1 million acres of golden-wing habitat and grow the
global population 50% by 2050. The Cornell Lab and working group partners also
published a set of regional habitat management guides with specific localized prescriptions to guide land managers in fostering golden-wing habitat. “We have the science to back this up,” Cornell Lab conservation scientist Ron Rohrbaugh said. “Now
it’s a matter of translating our science into habitat.”
New birds in new places
The plan is working. In central Pennsylvania, the management guidelines were used to thin trees
and create shrubby openings in a regenerating forest. Golden-winged Warblers showed up and
started nesting the following spring. Likewise, habitat created according to the plan in Tennessee
and North Carolina has resulted in new nesting golden-wings. The word is getting out among
concerned birders, too. After a Living Bird magazine story about Golden-winged Warblers ran
in the Spring 2013 issue, readers responded by offering up large acreages of private property in
Ontario and Tennessee for golden-wing habitat management.
What’s next?
The Cornell Lab and the working group are now working on a winter range conservation plan in
partnership with the Latin American bird conservation consortium Alianza Alas Doradas (Golden-winged Alliance). This winter, Cornell PhD student Ruth Bennett is working with her advisor, Conservation Science director Amanda Rodewald, to launch a research project in Honduras
on Golden-winged Warbler wintering grounds.
Fewer than 30 territorial pairs of Orange-breasted Falcons are left in Central America. Research shows that
the population is isolated and declining, limited to the
Maya Mountains of Belize and the Mirador Cordillera
of Guatemala. The population faces multiple threats,
including indiscriminate shooting—two falcons have
been shot in the past year. After the first shooting,
Robert Berry, Cornell Lab board member and director of the Peregrine Fund’s Orange-breasted Falcon
restoration program, immediately notified the Cornell
Lab’s eBird leaders, who maintain a special register for
the species. It was clear that the declining falcon population could not withstand additional mortality and
would soon be extirpated without immediate action.
Now experts from the Cornell Lab’s
Conservation Science department are assisting the Peregrine
Fund with setting up research
and conservation collaborations
with Guatemalan partners,
and Cornell PhD student Lily
Briggs is travelling to Belize
on behalf of the BirdSleuth
education program. Briggs will
lead workshops to formulate an
educational strategy for teaching schoolkids about Orangebreasted Falcon conservation.
As the kids bring that message
home to their parents,
local attitudes will
begin to change.
Orange-breasted Falcon
by Robert Berry
5
How Can We Create
Conservation Leaders?
By giving students a world of experience.
Gary Langham—From Cornell PhD
to Audubon Society Chief Scientist
From birder to scientist to leader
Gary Langham knew a lot about birding when he came to Cornell as a graduate student in 1996; he had years of experience working with his father leading bird tours in North, Central, and South America. But he came to the Cornell Lab to become a scientist. The Cornell Lab is unique as a conservation
science institute at one of the world’s premier research universities, with a
speciality in turning passionate birders into trained scientists who can think
critically about how natural systems work. For Langham, the opportunity to
study and work alongside some of the world’s top ornithologists inspired a
driving urge to do more, push boundaries, and be bold in his scientific study
of birds. In the process, he became a leader.
An Ambitious dissertation
Langham knew he wanted to do something big for his doctoral dissertation.
“The Cornell Lab is the gold standard in ornithological training,” Langham
says. “Being at Cornell gave me the courage to tackle something difficult,
something never done before.” And indeed, his PhD research broke new
ground, as he sought scientific verification that birds are a driver in butterfly
evolution. It wasn’t easy—five grueling years in South America on a shoestring
research budget in field camps with no electricity, where jeep breakdowns in
the Andes were common, and his research quarry, jacamars, were difficult to
find and study. Nevertheless, he prevailed, publishing the first direct evidence
that birds indeed can be responsible for the evolution of patterns on nonpoisonous butterflies that mimic the look of poisonous butterflies.
6
Thinking bigger,
beyond a degree
At the Cornell Lab, students often don’t
stay within the lines of a typical degree
program. That’s partly because they’re exposed to an array of experiences and mentors who broaden how they look at the
world. During his field work in Bolivia,
Venezuela, and Peru, Langham couldn’t
help but notice the dearth of support for
his counterparts there, local ornithologists who were abandoning biology due to
lack of resources and going into agriculture instead. So he took the very unconventional step as a student of founding a nonprofit group—the Neotropical
Grassland Conservancy—that funnels used research equipment and grants
from donors in the U.S. to biologists in South America. “The Lab gives you the
confidence to try things that a graduate student wouldn’t normally do,” says
Langham. Over the past 10 years, Langham’s nonprofit has helped more than
100 South American researchers and is still funding projects today.
As a graduate researcher, Gary Langham labored for years in rainforest field camps (photo above by
Stephen Williams). Langham’s research as a Cornell PhD student showed how predatory pressure
by the Rufous-tailed Jacamar (photo by Kenneth Rosenberg) impacts butterfly evolution. Today
Langham is Audubon’s chief scientist (photo at right courtesy of Audubon).
Photo courtesy of Sara Kaiser
Today Langham is at the top of his field, the chief scientist at the National Audubon Society. “My job is not just science, but policy, marketing, fundraising, management,” says Langham. “I draw on my experiences from the Lab every single day.”
And likewise, the Cornell Lab continues to benefit from the leaders
it develops. Langham is a key partner in Cornell Lab–Audubon joint
initiatives, such as the Great Backyard Bird Count, which achieved an
historic milestone in February. Powered by
eBird (another Cornell Lab–Audubon partnership), the count opened up to citizen scientists worldwide for the first time, resulting
in 3,144 species tallied (nearly a third of the
world’s total species) in just four days. “This
year’s historic Great Backyard Bird Count
shows the strength of these two great conservation organizations working together,”
Langham says.
Photo courtesy of Leila Hatch
Diverse experiences make leaders
“I draw
on my experiences from the Lab every single day.”
—Gary Langham, Audubon chief scientist
Turning Science
into Policy
Leila Hatch has one foot in the world of science
and the other in environmental policy. It’s a balancing act she learned as a graduate student at Cornell, where she studied
with former Cornell Lab Bioacoustics Research Program director Christopher
W. Clark as one of her advisors. Working with BRP, Hatch studied the song
dialects of whale populations, but she got much more than the typical graduate student experience as she accompanied Clark to meetings held by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the International
Whaling Commission. Today she’s a marine ecologist at the Stellwagen Bank
National Marine Sanctuary off the coast of Massachusetts, where she leads
research on the impacts of shipping noise on whales, and then uses her findings to advise U.S. policy on how best to protect marine wildlife from noise
impacts. In August 2012 Hatch and colleagues at NOAA and BRP made
newspaper headlines with a study that showed shipping traffic in Stellwagen Sanctuary is significantly affecting whales’ ability to communicate due to
chronic periods of high noise.
A new way to study
climate change
Are birds flexible enough to deal with a changing climate? That’s the intriguing, and challenging, question Cornell graduate student Sara
Kaiser tackled in her PhD dissertation published
in July. And she studied it in a novel way—by examining the birds’ blood. Over the course of six
breeding seasons, Kaiser took blood samples from almost 1,000 Black-throated Blue Warblers in New Hampshire’s White Mountains. She analyzed the
blood to look for signs of adaptation along the natural climatic changes up
and down the mountain slopes. Kaiser found that black-throated blues’ hormone levels responded rapidly to experimental increases in food availability
and was associated with adaptive changes in their mating and parental behavior. Kaiser’s innovative physiological approach may open up a new avenue
of studying how birds respond to climate-induced environmental change.
7
How Can We Make
Conservation Go Further?
Through partnerships.
Building a bird audio archive for
South America’s Southern Cone
Extending our reach, not our overhead
For every amazing bird species around the globe, there are people who live
near it, know it, admire it, and want it to live on for the future. The Cornell
Lab supports the people and groups around the world who are already in the
best position to help their local birds, by supplying them with knowledge,
resources, and training.
In South America, the continent blessed with the highest bird diversity in
the world, many birds from the tropical rain forests to the grassy steppes of
the Pampas still aren’t documented well enough for effective conservation.
Sound recordings of many birds are needed in order to conduct acousticsbased bird population monitoring (estimating population sizes by counting
the number of calls and songs heard).
But deploying teams of Cornell Lab audio recordists into the field is costprohibitive. Instead, the Macaulay Library has fostered a capacity-building
partnership that is blossoming into a much larger homegrown South American bird-recording enterprise.
Photo courtesy of Macaulay Library
Training new recordists
Every year, the Cornell Lab’s Macaulay Library holds workshops across the
country and around the world to train professional biologists and citizen scientists in the science of monitoring with sound. In 2007, Argentine ornithologist Nacho Areta attended a workshop in California on a scholarship from
the Ted Parker Memorial Fund. In Areta, Macaulay Library audio curator
Greg Budney saw a talented young biologist with a passion for bioacoustics
and conservation. Months later, Areta wrote to Budney with a proposal to
compile the first-ever high-quality bird recording library from the Southern
Cone of South America. Areta had the knowledge to do it, but he needed the
tools, technology, and archival support.
In 2013 the Macaulay Library commemorated the sad 20th anniversary of the
death of renowned ornithologist and bird audio recording pioneer Ted Parker. Parker contributed more than 10,000 recordings to the Macaulay Library,
including a rich collection of bird sounds from Central and South America. In
honor of Ted, this year the Cornell Lab will ship bird sound guides featuring
his recordings to schoolchildren and conservationists in Latin America.
8
Macaulay Library audio curator Greg Budney provides in-the-field instruction at an audio monitoring
workshop in South America (photo courtesy of Macaulay Library ).
Argentine ornithologist Nacho Areta (above) has added thousands of bird audio recordings from the
Southern Cone to the Macaulay Library (photo courtesy of Macaulay Library). Macaulay Library audio
workshops throughout South America are spreading the Cornell Lab’s expertise and advanced technology in acoustics-based bird monitoring to the continent with the highest bird diversity on earth.
Bicknell’s Thrush by Laura Erickson
eBird and the
U.S. Forest
Service
A Cornell Lab partnership
with the U.S. Forest Service
is leading to better management of our national forests
for birds. A USFS analysis of
eBird data found that onethird of America’s bird species
of conservation concern rely
on federal forestland for habitat. Now USFS biologists are using eBird species distribution models
to guide forest management. For example, in the Green Mountain
and White Mountain National Forests, USFS land leases for ski resorts
where Bicknell’s Thrushes occur were updated to ensure that thrush
habitat is managed properly.
Outfitting and Support
Hooded Grebe by Santiago Imberti
At the time, Areta and his colleagues in Grupo Falco—a team of 16 Argentine
ornithologists dedicated to recording birds of the Southern Cone—were using
outdated analog equipment. The Macaulay Library responded to Areta’s request
with a loaner fleet of digital audio recording equipment, along with copies of
the Cornell Lab’s Raven software, which enables fast, computerized analysis of
hours of recordings. Now outfitted with the tools for fast and efficient digital
audio collection, Areta and Grupo Falco stepped up their bird recording efforts.
12,000 recordings and counting
Altogether, Areta and Grupo Falco have added 12,000 bird recordings to the Macaulay Library. In December they added the melodic whistles of the endangered
Hooded Grebe, a first for the Macaulay archives. Areta has also used the Raven
software to tease apart sound recordings of earthcreepers, thus discovering a
new species—the Patagonian Forest Earthcreeper. More discoveries are sure to
come as Areta and Grupo Falco continue to contribute digital recordings to the
Macaulay Library, where they are available online to ornithologists everywhere,
thus adding to the world’s scientific understanding of South America’s birdlife.
9
How Can We Adapt a
Modern Economy to
Conserve Wildlife?
By being thoughtful, and using science.
Developing offshore wind energy
that’s friendlier to whales
Economics and wildlife can be compatible
The Cornell Lab strives toward a vision where people live side-by-side with
healthy natural systems, but that vision doesn’t mean stopping economic
growth. Rather, it means growing in new ways. For example, the renewable
energy potential that blows off the Atlantic coastline is tremendous—enough
pollution-free, wind-generated electricity to power about 14 million homes in
the United States, creating more than $200 billion in new economic activity
in the process. But for the whales of the North Atlantic Ocean, the construction of wind farms anchored to the ocean floor may be a massive disruption.
The Cornell Lab’s Bioacoustics Research Program, a leader in marine wildlife
research, is playing a critical role in crafting a solution for developing this
source of offshore wind energy while minimizing impacts to whales.
Listening underwater
In 2011, the New England Aquarium and the Cornell Lab began a joint project to assess the presence of whales in an area proposed for wind energy
development off the coast of Massachusetts. Cornell Lab BRP biologists deployed six of the Lab’s custom-designed marine autonomous recording units
in the waters of the Massachusetts Wind Energy Area to listen for whale
songs and calls.
10
North Atlantic Right Whale by National
Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
An Interstate Highway for Whales
Early results from the project showed that whales occur
more often near the proposed wind energy area than previously thought. All seven great whale species of the western
North Atlantic were documented, including three (humpback, fin, and minke) that appeared to be present almost
year-round. Most notably, endangered North Atlantic right
Rendering of proposed wind energy
whales were recorded from fall to spring. It turns out that
development off the Atlantic Coast
Massachusetts’ coastal waters could be a migratory stopover
courtesy of Deepwater Wind
hotspot for right whales, similar to the wetlands that ducks
use as they hopscotch along their flyways. This finding is important for conservation efforts
since fewer than 400 North Atlantic right whales are estimated to remain.
An historic agreement with
the wind industry
The research findings contributed to an agreement last year between federal regulators and
wind energy companies on a set of protective
measures to be voluntarily implemented. For example, wind energy companies will incorporate
the report’s findings into their work plans, such
as focusing their development activities during
the summer months when right whales are not
present. “Deepwater Wind is proud to sign this
historic agreement to help protect the North Atlantic right whale,” said Jeffrey Grybowski, CEO
of Deepwater Wind.
Bird-Friendly
Farming
In July, the Cornell Lab
and partners published
a State of the Birds report
(www.stateofthebirds.org) that focused on private
lands, particularly on the need for America’s farmers, ranchers, and foresters to be good stewards
of bird habitat. According to the report (which
was based on eBird distribution models), some of
America’s most threatened birds rely on habitat
found on private lands, particularly in agricultural
areas. More than 80 percent of grassland bird populations (which have experienced drastic declines)
are on private lands. But more than just ringing the
alarm, the report spotlighted efforts that are providing crucial bird habitat on farms and ranches, in
rice fields and timber plantations. “Working lands
and habitat conservation can complement, even
strengthen, each other,” the report emphasized.
As a follow-up, Cornell Lab director John Fitzpatrick wrote editorials in the Washington Post and
Denver Post that called for passage of a conservation-friendly Farm Bill that supports America’s
farmers and ranchers who grow good food while
providing good habitat for birds.
The State of
the Birds 2013
ate Lands
Report on Priv
United States
of America
The Cornell Lab’s Bioacoustics Research Program has pioneered the use of autonomous audio recording units that can be left in the field to
monitor for wildlife sounds over long periods of time. Terrestrial audio recording units invented by BRP were used in the search for Ivory-billed
Woodpeckers in the mid-2000s and are still used extensively today for bird and elephant audio surveys. BRP has also invented proprietary deepsea audio recording devices—sealed glass spheres containing a microprocessor, data storage, circuitry, and batteries, all connected to an external
hydrophone—that sink to the bottom of the ocean. Also known as “pop-ups,” these marine audio recording units release on command and float to
the water’s surface so they can be retrieved for data downloading. Now thanks to a generous gift from the Kenneth L. Harder Trust and Scott and
Karen (Cornell ‘81) Harder family, the Cornell Lab’s Acoustic Monitoring Project is developing the next generation of hardware and software for
recording and analyzing large volumes of natural sounds data. (Photos of pop-up recorders on back of boat courtesy of BRP.)
11
How Can We Do More
Than Just Inform People,
But Inspire Them?
By sharing the experience.
A multimedia expedition into The Yukon Delta
Sharing the world’s birds with the world
The Cornell Lab’s mission to conserve the earth’s biodiversity means helping
people realize they’re connected to birds throughout the world. The migratory birds that alight in our yards and ponds one day fly off to faraway places
where they mingle with other birds from other continents. Every time we
lose a species or a special place in those great crisscrossing flyways, that fabric of interconnectedness unravels a little bit more. For the Cornell Lab, it’s
important to inspire people to protect all birds, even birds they’ll never see in
places they’ll never visit. The Cornell Lab’s multimedia team virtually transports viewers to the world’s wildest places and portrays visceral encounters
with wildlife that make people care.
In a vast unknown, an opportunity to inspire
Coastal tundra pond in the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge by Gerrit Vyn
“If we don’t
Alaska’s Yukon Delta was the perfect subject for a Cornell Lab multimedia project. At 19 million acres, it’s one of the world’s largest waterfowl breeding areas.
But most people, even most birders, don’t know anything about it. Cornell Lab
multimedia producers Eric Liner and Gerrit Vyn partnered with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service to travel to the Yukon Delta and capture footage of breeding and
migration over the course of two years.
protect an area like this, it’s like turning off the faucet … and suddenly
at the other end of the flyways people won’t have the opportunity to see and appreciate
and find wonder in the organisms that make up this planet.”
—Brian McCaffrey, USFWS biologist
12
Long-tailed Jaeger by Gerrit Vyn
Conjuring the grandeur of the Yukon Delta
Inspiring teachers,
inspired students
Photo courtesy of Pamela Evans
The resulting film, narrated by USFWS biologist Brian McCaffrey, offers a
unique perspective on the Yukon Delta from a biologist who has worked there
for 20 years. As the camera sweeps across the waterlogged Alaskan plains,
panning above a V of migrating geese, then landing softly in an
egg-laden nest, the film transports viewers into a magical land
of tens of thousands of Sandhill Cranes, and millions of ducks,
loons, and shorebirds. McCaffrey’s words bring understanding to the avian spectacle, as he explains how birds come to the
Yukon Delta from as far away as New Zealand, Thailand, even
Africa. The Yukon Delta, he explains, is connected to nearly
every flyway in the world. (The film is posted online at birds.
cornell.edu/yukondelta.)
Willow Ptarmigan and nest by Gerrit Vyn
Reverberations throughout the flyway
In June the USFWS debuted the film at a meeting of the East Asian–
Australasian Flyway Partnership, attended by members of 15 nations
along a flyway that contains more than 50 million migratory waterbirds.
Now the State Department is showing the film at U.S. embassies in
Korea, Japan, Thailand, Vietnam, Australia, and New Zealand to
promote international conservation for the birds of this flyway.
“Everyone who has seen this film through the State Department, domestically and abroad, has been wowed by the
beauty and quality of the film itself, and affected by the
new knowledge of our shared environmental resource
with East Asia and the Pacific,” said Antoinette
Condo, who works for the Biodiversity Team at the
U.S. Department of State. “Our economic officer
in Seoul was very excited to use the film and additional information about the birds we share
with Korea in talks with students about the
mission of the State Department and our
mutual interests.”
Cornell Lab multimedia producer Eric Liner scans for shorebirds across the
vast tidal flats of the Yukon Delta. Photo by Gerrit Vyn.
Enthusiasm in the classroom flows from teacher to
students. BirdSleuth, the Cornell Lab’s K-12 science
education curriculum, gets teachers excited to
teach about birds. For Pamela Evans, a 6th-grade
teacher in Charleston, Illinois, BirdSleuth’s classroom resources are a great way to get kids using
the scientific process to answer their own questions
about nature. Evans used the Bird Bingo unit to get
her students outside practicing observation skills.
She also engaged her class in a unit about evolution where students were challenged to design
their own bird and then write a report explaining
its unique adaptations to a real environment. “My
favorite part about BirdSleuth is when my students
acquire a love of birds,” Evans says. One boy in her
class was so inspired he added a birdbath and several birdhouses to his family’s backyard so he could
attract more birds to identify and watch at home.
13
HOW CAN WE...
…connect people to nature
in their own backyard?
By Making it fun to watch Birds.
...open new doors for scientific exploration?
By Exploring in New ways.
The Cornell Lab’s Fuller Evolutionary Biology Program uses the emerging
powerful technologies in molecular biology to delve into the processes that
drive evolution and generate the earth’s biodiversity. This past year Fuller
Postdoctoral Fellow Scott Taylor turned these research tools toward the field
of climate change science, as he joined a collaborative study examining how
changing climatic conditions are affecting the hybridization of Black-capped
Chickadees and Carolina Chickadees. Taylor’s research opens a new door,
studying how climate change influences species interactions at the level of
the genome. Ultimately, Taylor’s research aims to improve our understanding of the influences of a changing climate on species’ interactions.
The Cornell Lab’s citizen-science programs make bird
watching fun and purposeful. In 2013 the programs
had a record-breaking year for getting people engaged Pine Grosbeak by BirdSpotter
in watching what’s going on in their backyards. Nest- photo contest winner
Catherine M. Diehl-Robbins
Watch participants monitored more than 17,000 nesting attempts in all 50 states, the most ever recorded in
the history of the program. Project FeederWatch recruited a record number
of participants (more than 20,000) to submit a record number of bird observations (7.3 million), with a big boost from a partnership with Bob’s Red Mill
Natural Foods. The Bob’s Red Mill BirdSpotter Photo Contest encouraged
FeederWatchers to submit photos of birds in their backyard to the program’s
Facebook page, with weekly winners awarded prizes from Bob’s Red Mill.
Over the course of the contest the FeederWatch Facebook page grew from
2,500 to more than 11,000 Likes, building social-media momentum for recruiting even more FeederWatchers this winter.
…make the world’s biggest biodiversity
media archive even better?
By making it accessible to everyone.
Cornell Lab researcher Scott Taylor is using thousands of
genetic markers (like the ones shown at top) distributed
across the chickadee genome to identify hybrids and
gain a better understanding of the genetic reproductive
barriers between Black-capped and Carolina chickadees.
Black-capped Chickadee by Dale J. Herman
14
Last October the Cornell Lab’s Macaulay Library completed a 12-year-long project to digitize the more than 150,000
analog wildlife audio recordings in its archives. “In terms of
speed and the breadth of material now accessible to anyone
in the world, this is really revolutionary,” said Macaulay Library audio curator Greg Budney. “This is one of the greatest research and conservation resources at the Cornell Lab,
and through its digitization we’ve swung the doors open on it in a way that
wasn’t possible 10 or 20 years ago.” As a prime example, in May the Macaulay Library released The Cornell Guide to Bird Sounds: Master Set for North
America, a comprehensive audio download package of nearly 5,000 MP3 files
from 735 species that is the most complete vocal repertoire of North American birds ever released.
Forest elephant by Andrea Turkalo
…study an animal that hides
in the forest?
…inspire people to care about a bird
on the other side of the world?
By listening closely.
By bringing the reader to the bird.
For 14 years, the Elephant Listening Project within the Cornell
Lab’s Bioacoustics Research Program has conducted acoustic
monitoring of forest elephants roaming and rumbling through
some of the world’s largest rainforests in Africa. Forest elephants
are a distinct species from their larger cousins on the savannah.
They mostly stay within the forests to browse vegetation and eat
tree fruits, making them more often heard than seen, and very
difficult to study. But scientific research on forest elephants is
critical because their population has declined by 60% over the
past decade. This past summer the ELP team released the firstever measurement of how far a forest elephant’s rumbles can
travel through dense rainforest—from 3 to 4 miles, as calculated
by comparing the energy loss on more than 200 recorded calls.
This distance is similar to how far elephant calls carry on the open
savannah, meaning the forest elephant’s calls carry through the
trees as if they weren’t there.
Last winter, the Cornell Lab’s award-winning
magazine Living Bird ran a feature story by
Lab multimedia producer Gerrit Vyn about
his expedition into Russia’s remote Siberian tundra to document the demise of the
Spoon-billed Sandpiper, one of the world’s
most endangered birds. Vyn’s vivid firstperson account of interactions with this
special species struck a deep chord with
the magazine’s readers. “Gerrit Vyn’s magnificent piece about the Spoon-billed Sandpiper was one of the
best conservation articles I’ve ever read,” wrote one reader. Another asked: “I was immensely moved by Gerrit Vyn’s article on
the Spoon-billed Sandpiper …How can I help this bird?”
The male Spoon-billed Sandpiper
featured in a Living Bird story last
year was re-spotted in August along
the coast of China, a hopeful sign
of survival for one of the world’s
most endangered species.
…grow global awareness about birds?
By teaching more people,
and reaching out to new audiences.
Michelle and Peter Wong
Cornell Lab of Ornithology scientists are also core Cornell faculty members, and in 2013
they taught more students enrolled in Cornell courses than ever before—about 1,500 undergraduates and postgraduates. But that’s just a fraction of the total number of people
around the world who are learning about birds through the Cornell Lab. More than 600
people logged on to the Cornell Lab’s new bird identification webinars, some from as far
away as Australia, Chile, and the Netherlands. The Lab’s Celebrate Urban Birds program
offered up bird-related science, cultural, and community activities in two languages,
English and Spanish, to more than 128,000 students, from American inner-city schools
to rural Mexican villages. The Cornell Lab’s broadest reach of all happens every day on
the preeminent online information source about birds—AllAboutBirds.org, visited by
more than 10 million people in the past 12 months, with annual web traffic up 66%.
15
Our donors
a letter to
A
The Discover Campaign—Looking Ahead to the Next Century of Conservation
s one of our best supporters, you already know
what the Cornell Lab of Ornithology is, and what
we do. This annual report is full of the successes in research and conservation made possible
thanks to your generosity.
Over the next two years, we’re going to ask you
to Discover the Cornell Lab again—to look a little
more deeply at us, and to look ahead to the future
as we approach our 100th anniversary in 2015.
With birds and other wildlife facing more intense
pressures than ever before, it’s an urgent time to
think about what we must do in the next century.
The Discover Campaign is a centennial effort to
grow and strengthen the Cornell Lab’s capacity and long-term stability. The campaign is the
product of a series of thoughtful and productive
strategic planning sessions by the Cornell Lab’s
leadership and administrative board over the past
few years. From these sessions emerged a vision
for the Cornell Lab of the next 100 years, a vision
focused on discovery—new science, new scientists, new technologies, and new knowledge.
In the coming months we will be sharing this vision with you through the Discover Campaign,
and we’ll be taking this vision out to new audiences. Despite our more than 70,000 donors—and
the tens of millions of people we reach through
AllAboutBirds.org, Living Bird magazine, and all
our communications and educational efforts devoted to birds—the Cornell Lab is still not a household
name. We will need all the friends we can make and
all the resources we can muster as we strive toward
a world where people live side-by-side with wildlife
and stable, healthy natural systems.
Make Birds Your Legacy
It’s easy to include the Cornell Lab in your estate plans and participate in the Discover Campaign’s vision
to sustain the study and conservation of birds for generations to come. To make a bequest through your will, simply include the
language: “I give and bequeath the sum of $________ (or ___% of my residuary estate) to Cornell University, an educational institution in Ithaca, N.Y., for the Lab of Ornithology to be used in support of its charitable purposes.” To learn more about estate planning opportunities that benefit you and the Cornell Lab, please contact Scott Sutcliffe (607-254-2424; [email protected]).
The Cornell Lab is pleased to acknowledge such friends in perpetuity as members of the Sapsucker Woods Society.
16
Lapland Longspur by Gerrit Vyn
That’s an ambitious vision, and our campaign
goal is accordingly ambitious: Our goal is to raise
$125 million, with significant investments by our
principal benefactors and thousands of gifts from
our annual supporters. This is our rallying moment. The next 100 years will be a better century
for birds.
Please keep an eye out for mailings and announcements as our Discover Campaign takes
flight in 2014. And as always, deep thanks for
your generosity and commitment.
Sincerely,
Sean Scanlon
Senior Director, Development and Philanthropy
(607) 254-1105; [email protected]
$100,000 and up
Anonymous (1)
Estate of Margaret Barton
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berry
Dr. Joan Brenchley-Jackson
Ian Cumming
Mr. & Mrs. Russell Faucett
Mr. & Mrs. H. Laurance Fuller
Scott & Karen Harder, Kenneth L.
Harder Trust
Mrs. Imogene P. Johnson
Estate of Linda Kramer
Leon Levy Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. William Macaulay
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Morgens
H. Charles & Jessie Price
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Rose III
Estate of Robert F. Schumann
Dr. Steve Adelson & Mrs. Ellen G.
Adelson
James & Susannah Adelson
John Alexander
Mr. Rex J. Bates
Samuel & Diane Bodman
C.H. Stuart Foundation
Dorothy Carpenter
Elisabeth Dudley
Louisa Duemling
Philip Edmundson
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Ellis III
Jane V. Engel
Ronald Clendenen
Mr. John Foote & Ms. Kristen Rupert
Clifton & Thelma Garvin
George & Deirdre Glober
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Richard Halberstadt
donors
Mrs. Jennifer P. Speers
The Noyce Foundation
The Scotts Miracle Gro Company
Wolf Creek Charitable Foundation
$25,000 to $99,999
Anonymous (2)
Estate of Helga N. Alten
Mr. & Mrs. Philip H. Bartels
V. Richard & Nancy H. Eales
Estate of Elizabeth E. Fay
Ms. Tracy E. Holmes
The Ivy Expeditions Fund
The Ivy Fellowship
John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation
The Estate of Mary B. Johnston
Kathryn & Herman Kiplinger
James & Rebecca Morgan
Wendy & Hank Paulson
Estate of Marjorie A. Pitts
Scott & Julia Schnuck
Mrs. B.J. Shortridge
The Christopher Reynolds
Foundation, Inc.
Estate of Shirley A. Victor
Joseph & Felicia Weber
$10,000 to $24,999
Anonymous (1)
Ms. Mary P. Hines
Ms. Marguerite Hoffman
Mrs. Muriel K. Horacek
Mr. Jason S. Kats
Mr. Austin H. Kiplinger
Ronni Lacroute
Ms. Mary Ann Mahoney
Davis & Sharon Merwin
James & Sally Morgens
Ms. Sandra J. Moss
Ms. Mary Mundinger
Mr. Leigh H. Perkins, Jr.
Ms. Judith S. Renshaw
Elizabeth & Jean Rowley
Sacharuna Foundation
Irwin & Melinda Simon
Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth T. Steadman
The Eppley Foundation for Research
The Seeley Foundation
Dr. Lavern Timmer
Mr. Lewis E. Topper
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Williams
Mr. L. Christopher Wright
Ms. Lisa K. Yang
$5,000 to $9,999
Anonymous (1)
David & Carol Adelson
Mr. John E. Alexander
Mr. Leonard Berenfield
Mrs. Mary L. Carlsen
James Carpenter
Elliot & Karin Cattarulla
Mr. Alan Cody
Cornell Class of 1962
Ms. Agnes D. Cralley
Mr. & Mrs. Judson M. Dayton
Ms. Norma Edsall
Ms. Susan K. Feagin
James & Cathy Gero
Ms. Adelaide P. Gomer
Dr. Adadot Hayes
Mr. & Mrs. Elliott D. Hillback
Philip Jensen
Mr. David B. Jones
Mr. & Mrs. David Junkin
Dr. William T. Leeburg
W. Wallace McDowell
David McNicholas
Brian & Heidi Miller
Marcia & Thomas Morton
Evelyn & Gregory Oyler
Susan Permut
Dr. & Mrs. Hunter Rawlings
Inge & Uwe Reichenbach
Judy Richardson
Andrew Sabin
Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Schaenen, Jr.
Estate of Francis G. Scheider
Barry K. Schwartz
Mrs. Beth Ann Segal
Mrs. Carol U. Sisler
Bailey Smith
Marybeth Sollins
John & Bonnie Strand
Dr. Stephen A. Wald
Mrs. Mary Clare Ward
Ralph & Jennifer Watts
Elizabeth Weinshel
Shelby White
Mr. Michael Williams & Ms. Sally Russ
$1,000 to $4,999
Anonymous (10)
Mr. Joseph Acosta
Mr. J. Dinsmore Adams, Jr.
Adelphic Cornell Educational Fund
Adonai Foundation
Ann & Philip Aines
Mr. Ferris Akel III
Ms. Rebecca A. Aker
Camille & Eleanor Allen & Family
Estate of Elwin F. Anderson
Dr. Mary Alice Anderson
Mr. William R. Anderson
Mrs. Ruth L. Anderson
Ms. Janet Anderson-Ray
Mr. J. Richard Andrews
Ms. Jodie Apeseche
Mrs. Jean R. Armour
Ms. Wilhemina Austin
Mr. James H. Averill, Jr.
Ms. Catherine Aves
Ms. Judith M. Bajoris
Mr. James A. Baker IV
Mr. Robert S. Baker
Dr. Jeffrey Baldani & Ms. Ulla Grapard
Ms. Alice-Ann Bandoni
Ms. Robin Barker & Mr. David
Tempero
Ms. Pamela Borthwick Bass
Stephen Baumgartner
Mrs. Meridith R. Beck
Mr. Bruce Becker
Cliff & Susan Beittel
William & Nancy Bellamy
Mr. Herman Berkman
Ms. Carin Berolzheimer & Mr. Mark
Farver
Richard Bierregaard
Bluestone Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Bill Boardman
Mrs. Esther S. Bondareff
Ms. Eleanor F. Bookwalter
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Booth, Jr.
Matthew Born
Mr. Alan Boss
Ms. Jean C. Bottcher
Nadine Bouler
Dr. Susan C. Bourque
Mr. Stanley Bowden
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Boyd
Professor & Mrs. Edward Boyno
Mr. Philip A. Bradley
Mr. James Branegan & Dr. Stefania
Pittaluga
Mr. & Mrs. John Breyer
Sandra & Jeff Bricker
Mrs. Walter F. Brissenden
Carolyn Summers & David Brittenham
Mr. Bart Brown
Ms. Cori A. Brown
Ms. Becky A. Brown
Ms. Percy Browning
Mr. Jack Brubaker
Kenneth & Karen Buchi
Scott & Mavis Buginas
Ms. Amanda Burden
Ms. Susan Burkhardt
Mr. William D. Burrows
Ms. Colette A. Burrus
Dr. Tom Cade
Ms. Emily B. Campbell
Mrs. Sharon Campbell
Dr. Ogden B. Carter
Mr. Henry T. Chandler
Mr. Donald F. Chandler
Mr. Walter B. Chaskel
Mr. Whiting Chisman
Mr. Jack G. Clarke
Dr. J.A. Clayman
Dr. Clare Close
Mr. & Mrs. Eric Cody
Mr. James Cohen & Ms. Barbara Carey
Ms. Karenn Colby
Mr. John J. Coleman, III
Karen & Gregory Collins
Robert & Vanne Cowie
D&D Commodities
Ms. Laurie Dann
Mrs. Jackson Davis
Ms. Martha R. Davis
Mr. Vernon D. Dayhoff
Mr. Edward N. Dayton
Dr. Thomas J. Delaney
Mr. Robert DeLine
Ms. Anne C. Dement
Dr. Nancy A. DiMartino, M.D.
Ms. Lynn Dixon
Mr. Todd Dixon
Mr. Wesley Dixon
Mr. Gordon Douglas
Ms. Clover M. Drinkwater
David & Susan Drown
Ms. Jennifer Dubois
Lauren Dudley
Dr. & Mrs. Sam Dugan
Nancy Durr
Victoria & John Dyrek
Mr. Leonard J. Eaton Jr.
Major Theodore Henry Eiben
Eiserer-Hickey Foundation, Inc.
Dr. Bruce A. Eissner & Mrs. Judith P.
Eissner
Ms. Collins Redman
Mr. Joseph H. Ellis
Neal & Ronna Erickson
Mrs. Rosemary Hall Evans
Mrs. Cecilia C. Fabbro
Nicky & Rick Falck
Mrs. Meryl A. Faulkner
Ms. Sherry Ferguson & Mr. Robert
Zoellick
Dr. Maxine M. Field
Lee & Amy Fikes
Ms. Christine Finerty
John & Molly Fitzpatrick
Mrs. Martha Flanders
Samuel & Nancy Fleming
Fletcher Bay Foundation
Professor Raymond T. Fox
Frances B. & William S. Todman
Foundation
Stephen & Barbara Friedman
Mr. Charles A. Fritz III
Drs. Einar & Sally Gall
Ms. Natalia G. Garcia
Barbara Garlinghouse
Mr. Craig W. George
Mr. Floyd H. Gilles
Mr. Robert Glass & Ms. Bronwen
Nishikawa
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Goelet
Elizabeth Gordon
Mr. Jack Gorman
Ms. Cynthia Gossett
Mrs. Bernice Graham
Mr. & Mrs. Bradley R. Grainger
Mr. Andrew R. Grainger
Mr. William F. Gratz
Mr. Paul Gray
Ms. Judith H. Greene
Ms. Barbara T. Gregor
Ms. Julia A. Gregory
Ms. Dorothy A. Gregory
Mr. Frederick Guilford
William & JoAnn Hackos
Mr. & Mrs. James C. Hanchett
Dr. John D. Hanna
Ms. Rebecca Hansen
Mr. Bruce Harris
Ms. Karen E. Harris
Mrs. Margaretta S. Hausman
Jane & Gerry Haviland
Mr. Thomas A. Hendrickson
Dr. Susan & Mr. Peter Henry
Ms. Joan Hero
Mrs. Sherley A. Higuera
Moira & Mark Hintsa
Y. Fanny Ho
Mrs. Elizabeth Hoagey
Dr. David C. Hodgdon
Ms. Theodora W. Hooton
Ms Caitlin Hopkinson
Mr. Robert Hugar
Mr. James D. Hunt
Mr. William C. Hunter
Ms. Gale S. Hurd
Ms. Ellen G. Jacobs
Kathryn & John Jacobus
Ms. Sara Jaeger
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew MacAoidh Jergens
Mr. Peter M. Joftis
Mr. Alan R. Johnston
Ms. Margaret H. Jones
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Kalivoda
Mr. Steven Kapnick
Mrs. Karen Rupert Keating
Ms. Belinda A. Keever
Mr. Ronald J. Kemperle
Dr. M. Keith Kennedy
Mrs. Jeanie Kilgour
17
donors(continued)
Hugh Kingery
Knight & Ann Kiplinger
Donald & Mimi Kirk
Dr. Robert E. Kleiger
Ms. Karen Klomparens
Mr. Thomas S. Knight, Jr.
Mr. Barry Kriegel
Ms. Lois Kroll
Estate of Robert Laskowski
Mr. Thomas Lawrence
Richard & Susan Lee
Ms. Lucie Lehmann
Mr. E. A. Leinroth, Jr.
John & Kim Lemke
Ms. Lorraine Lid
Dr. James Lillard & Dr. Rebecca Lillard
Mr. & Mrs. Randolph S. Little
Liz Claiborne & Art Ortenberg
Foundation
Philip & Caroline Loughlin
Dr. & Mrs. Herbert J. Louis
Mr. C. James Luther
Ms. Angela Lyras
Ms. Beverley J. MacInnis
Mrs. Kelley Macklaier
Mrs. Frances Magee
Ms. Carolyn Mangeng & Mr. Walter Spall
Jennifer Manikas
Dr. Richard Marshak & Dr. Andrea
Landsberg
Mr. David E. Mattingley
Frederick & Linda Mau
Dr. Leigh McBride & Dr. Richard
McCormack
Dr. Colleen McBride
Mr. Timothy McCaffrey
Thomas & Linda McCarthy
Marsha & James McCormick
Mrs. Karin McCormick
Mary McCrossen
Ms. Edith McCurdy
Ms. Winifred McDowell & Mr. John
Follett
J. Kevin & Elizabeth McMahon
Mrs. Pamela McMillie
Mrs. Sally McVeigh
Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Meinig
Ms. Mary Anne Mekosh
Dr. June Mercer
Ms. Friedrike Merck
Ms. Ellen Miller
Stephen & Evalyn Milman
Mr. John V. Moore
Mr. Michael Moran
Lauren Morgens & Matthew J. Sarver
18
William & Mary Sue Morrill
Mr. Duryea Morton
Penny & Don Moser
Ms. Susan L. Mowry
Mr. Neil Multack
Mr. & Mrs. Salvatore Murdocca
Ellen & Rachel Naegeli
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Nebenzahl
Dr. Diana Nevins
Professor & Mrs. Robert W. Newcomb
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Nissley
Ms. Gretchen Noelke
Nicholas & Susan Noyes
Dr. Patricia O’Handley
Holly McMillan
Ms. Candace Osdene
Dr. Frederick Parker
Mrs. Ellen S. Parkes
David Paynter
Mr. James Pea
Mr. Chet Pederson
Stephen Penrose
Dr. Karen Perizzolo & Joel Mattox
Mr. Ralph Peterson
Mrs. Elaine Pinfold
Mr. Robert T. Priddy
Dr. Robert Purcell
Mrs. Sally Quinn
Mr. John B. Quinn
Mr. Mark Ramsey
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Randall
Adele Ray
Ms. Frances M. Rew
Ms. Deborah A. Reynolds
Dr. & Mrs. Frank H. T. Rhodes
Dr. Beverly S. Ridgely
Mrs. Dorothy W. Rinaldo
Dr. Dean R. Rising
Dr. William L. Risser & Family
Ms. Marie Ritter
Dwight Robinson
Ms. Rhonda Rochambeau
Mr. & Mrs. Steven C. Rockefeller
Mr. Larry Roel
Ms. Leah Rumbough
Dr. William L. Rutherford
Dr. Lori Saltz
Mrs. Carolyn W. Sampson
Dr. Donald C. Samson
Mr. Richard Sanders & Ms. Janice Hand
Mrs. & Mr. Allison Savage-Cairns
Ms. Lynn Scarlett
Mr. George Scheets
Peter Schluter
Ms. Thelma C. Schoonmaker
Patricia & Richard Schramm
Mr. Frederick Schroeder
Ms. Paula M. Schutte
The O’Neill Petal Charitable Fund
Mrs. Pamela Schwartz
Mrs. Margaret F. Scott
Drs. Sheldon & Lucia Severinghaus
Ms. Janice Sharp & Mr. Brian Bowman
William & Jacquelyn Sheehan
Donald & Linda Simmons
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Rogers Simpson
Dr. Joan M. Sinnott
Ms. Mary Ann Siri
Mrs. Susan L. Sloan
Ms. Elizabeth A. Smith
Janet & Robert Smith
Ms. Lada Sochynsky
Ms. Susan Sollins
Ms. Shirley Sontheimer
Ms. Nancy B. Soulette
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Spahn
Vivek Sriram
The Stampfl Family
Ms. Nancy B. States
Mrs. Sharon Steele-McGee
Dr. Peter B. Stifel
Sherri Stuewer
Ms. Jean Suplick & Mr. Michael
Matuson
Swimmer Family Foundation
Mrs. Anne Symchych
Ms. Catherine Symchych
Ms. Juliet P. Tammenoms Bakker
Mr. Harold Tanner
Mr. Lawrence D. Taylor
Mr. Richard G. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Allan R. Tessler
Manley & Doriseve Thaler
Drew Schmidt
Mr. Jim Tilling
Bill Todman
Dr. Allen J. Togut
Mrs. Sally S. Tongren
Mack & Carol Travis
Mrs. Mary McIlhany Trout
Dr. Patricia Ann Turner
Susanna & James Turner
Lewis & Connie Ulrey
Dr. & Mrs. Russ Valentine
Dr. Duane Vander Pluym
Mr. Wouter K. Vanderwal
Dr. Elizabeth Venrick & Mr. Ronald
Patrick
Ms. Rhonda Vitanye
Mrs. Emily V. Wade
Dr. Marcia J. Wade
Mrs. Susan N. Wagner
Dr. Judith L. Wagner
Ms. Peggy Walbridge
Dr. & Mrs. Charles Walcott
Mr. Ralph Wall
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Warriner
David & Michaelin Watts
Mr. Jude A. Weis
Mrs. Stefani Weiss
Kenan & B. Briscoe White
Dr. Brian White
Ms. J. Claire Whiting
Wayne & Alice Whitmore
Mr. Philip R. Whitney
Wildlife Conservation Society-Bronx Zoo
Ms. Susan Williams
Mr. John Williamson
Dr. Kay M. Williamson
Beth & John Wittenberg
Mr. George C. Wood
Ms. Jeannie B. Wright
Richard & Annemarie Zimmerman
$500 to $999
Anonymous (14)
Dr. Rosalind Abernathy
Mrs. Hermine Aborn
Mr. & Mrs. Heman P. Adams
Mrs. Felicia Adams
Christopher Addison & Sylvia Ripley
Ms. Suzanne F. Aigen
Ms. Oona Aldrich
Mr. Jesse Alexander
Mr. John R. Alexander
Mrs. Debra D. Anderson
James & Darla Anderson
Ms. Linda M. Anderson
Douglas & Arlie Anderson
Ms. Gayle A. Anderson
Dr. Margaret D. Anderson
Ms. Marcia Anthony
Mrs. Ann Arend
Ms. Nancy Arnold
Mr. Stephen Aubry
Ms. Anne M. August
Ms. Rachel Avenia-Prol
Ms. Susan Avery & Mr. Joseph Holmes
Ms. Maria F. Bachich
Mary Bachman
Peter Backman
Ms. J. Bagley
Ms. Susan Baisley
Ms. Virginia H. Baker
Ms. Jan Baker
John & Janet Baker
Dr. Kathleen E. Ball
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bangert
Mr. Donald Barnes
Allen Barnes
Dr. & Mrs. Peter Barnett
Barnum Animal Hospital
Mr. & Mrs. Jim Barry
Dr. Earl G. Barton
Mrs. Marianne Bastin
Ms. Patricia G. Bates
Gene Bauer
Ms. Joanne Bauer
Penelope Bauer
Mr. & Mrs. Chris Bauknecht
Mr. Kim Beard
Mrs. Katherine L. Beattie
Nichole Becker
Susan Beckhorn
Ms. Jill Beckman
Mrs. Lori L. Belling
Ms. Majanah Hagan Bender
Dr. Lance A. Benner
Ms. Lisa Berger & Mr. Charles Burwick
Mrs. Barbra Berry
Mr. George F. Bing
Ms. Joan M. Birchenall
Birds Choice
Guthrie & Louise Birkhead
Mr. Samuel Black
Ms. Olivia Blackburn
Mrs. Constance Blau
Mr. Jefferey Bleam
Mr. John Bloomfield
Blue Cross Pet Hospital
Ms. Ann Blume
Mr. Greg Bodker
Books for America
Ms. Bonita A. Bope
Dr. Bonny Bouck Wilson
Ms. Eloise Bouye
Ms. Jacqueline P. Bower
Mr. Robert R. Bowman
Brian & Kathryn Brackney
Mr. Jim A. Brady
Dr. Robert L. Brandt, Jr.
Maureen Breakiron-Evans
Ms. Karen Breckan
Mr. Lawrence Brennan
Ms. Kitty Brigham
Mrs. Mary M. Brock
Mr. Brian J. Broderick
Mr. Craig Brodock
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Bronzino, Sr.
Mrs. Carroll C. Brooks
Ms. Deirdre M. Brown
Mr. William R. Brown
Ms. Phyllis M. Browning
Mrs. Jean Brubeck
Barbara Bruno
Ms. Mary M. Brunot
Mrs. Joan D. Budai
Kate Budd
Ms. Dorothy Bukantz
Mr. & Mrs. Buschmann
Ms. Nancy Butler
Butler Family Foundation
Nan & Joseph Bylebyl
Ms. Kathryn E. Cade
Mr. Craig H. Caldwell
Ms. Susan Whitney Callahan
Mrs. Jean M. Callihan
Ms. Nancy Camacho
Ms. Shirley Cameron
Mrs. Doris A. Campbell
Mr. & Mrs. David A. Caputo
Dudley & Curtis Carlson
Ms. Elfriede Carney
Ms. Frances Carter
Ms. Virginia H. Carter
James & Glenda Cartwright
Mr. Robert Cary & Ms. Janet
Nussmann
Ms. Mary E. Case
Sara & Bob Caulk
Ms. Monica Cej
Ms. Joan Chalikian
Dr. & Mrs. Jerry R. Chamberlin
Mr. Rich Chambers
George L. Chapman
Ms. Abbie B. Chapman
Mr. Andrew Chen & Ms. J. Heidi Mass
Dr. John W. Chesney
Ms. Katherine Christy
Charles & Nancy Cladel
Patricia & Al Clark
Mrs. Karen Clarke
Ms. Christina Clayton & Mr. Stanley
Kolber
Ms. Kathi D. Clement
Mrs. Bettine M. Close
Terry & Zeo Coddington
Ms. Cindy Cole
Samuel Coleman
Mr. James R. Collins
Ms. Carol R. Combs
Mr. Richard Comstock
Ms. Janice C. Conavay
Mr. Geoffrey Conrad
Conservation Trust of Puerto Rico
Dr. Frederic A. Conte
Alice Corbin
Professors William & Maria Crawford
Mr. Thomas Crusse
Ms. Mary Ann Cunningham & Mr.
Tom Finkle
Ms. Bena L. Currin
Peter & Rhoda Curtiss
Ms. Cornelia Daley & Mr. Phil Cowan
Ms. Denise C. Daly
Mrs. Lydia H. Dane
Mr. Henry M. Darley
Carl & Penelope DauBach
Mrs. Stuart Davidson
Mr. Ron T. Davies
Mr. Caleb Davis
Mr. David Davis & Ms. Jo Ann Mills
Dr. Nancy & Mr. Thomas Dawson
Ms. Ann Day
Ms. Elisabeth J. Dayton
Mrs. Wallace C. Dayton
Mrs. Vicki DeLoach
Ms. Wendy DelValle
Ms. J.H. Depew
Mr. William E. Derrenbacher
Mr. Timothy Devarenne
Mrs. Michelle D. Devine
Mr. John DeWees
Ms. Nan Dietert
Ms. Laura Doll
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph K. Donohue
Ms. Kelly Donovan
Mr. John Doolen
Mrs. Barbara Doolin
Mrs. Anne M. Dorazio
Dr. Nanette Dowling
Mr. David E. Drinkwater-Lunn
Ann Duey
Mr. Curtis Duffield
Mrs. Julie Durrance & Family
Mrs. Phil Duryee
Michael & Linda Duttweiler
Mr. Steven Ealick & Judy Virgilio
Ms. Susan J. Egloff
Dr. Bradley C. Eichhorst
Ms. Rebecca Eisen
Ms. Nancy J. Elifrit
Dr. William T. Ellison
Rostyslaw Elyjiw
Mrs. Holly K. Emmons
Jennifer Engel
Mr. Henry Erikson
Ms. Veronica Espada
Mrs. Alexandra L. Evans
Professor & Mrs. Howard E. Evans
William Evarts
Ms. Marcie Feldman
Ms. Marcia Ferguson & Mr. Joe Tokar
Mr. Charles Ferris
Dr. David Ferster & Dr. Indira Raman
Sandy Fiebelkorn
Mr. Robert Fiedler
Ms. Ellen Fields
Mr. William B. Fisch
Ms. Virginia C. Fisher
Stanley & Gale Flagg
Mrs. Mary L. Floyd
Brian & Judith Foley
Susan R.E. Fondy, M.D.
Ms. Susan Ford-Hoffert
Thomas & Julietta Foster
Dr. Matthew Fraker & Dr. Sherri
Thornton
Mr. Jonathan Franzen
Ms. Nancy G. Frederick
Mr. Alan J. Friedman
Master Solomon Friedman
Ms. Ann Fruth
Mr. Timothy A. Fuhrman
Ms. Carin J. Galbally
Carl Galeana
Mrs. Diane E. Galvin
Dr. & Mrs. Walter Gamble
Ms. Luanna Gamble
Mrs. Chris Garrett
Mr. Walter Garrett
Mr. Clayton Gascoigne
Dr. & Mrs. David Gasser
Mr. Alan M. Gast
Ms. Valerie Gebert
Ms. Gail M. Getz
Joanne & Robert Gianniny
Mr. Bryan Gieszl
Ms. Nancy Gilbert
John & Michele Gillett
Mr. William G. Gilstrap
Ms. Patsy L. Glass
Mr. Edward Gomez & Ms. Christina
Van Fossan
Dr. & Mrs. Robert Gordon
Ms. Joan B. Gossner
Mrs. Susan Gottlieb
David Graham
Ms. Jane E. Graves
Mrs. Carol Ann Krug Graves
Ms. Judith A. Gray
Ms. Julia L. Gray
Ms. Cynthia Gray
Greater Kansas City Community
Foundation
Ms. Dorothy D. Gregor
Cheryl Griffiths
Ms. Amy E. Grose
Ms. Barbara Gross
Ms. Marlene Grover
Ms. Joan M. Guerin
Mr. Scott Gunnison
Mr. Herbert Hachler
Mr. Will Haffner
Dr. Paul C. Hager
Mrs. Thomas D. Haines
Dr. Heather E. Hallen-Adams
Christian & Helen Haller
Ms. Jane C. Hallowell
Ms Virginia Hamrick
Mrs. Carol Hanawalt
Mrs. Shirley A. Hance
Clay Hancock
Mr. John J. Hannan
Ms. Jane E. Hardy
Harlingen Veterinary Clinic
Mr. Steven Harmer
Mr. Thomas Harris & Ms. Doreen Kelly
Dr. Francis Harris
John Hartwell
Mr. Mark P. Hassell
Professor Martin F. Hatch
Mr. Bob Hawkins
Mr. Thomas E. Hawley
Ms. Lisa Hayes
Mrs. Donna Hayes
Ms. Mona L. Hayford
Jim & Becky Heckenbach
Mr. Gary J. Heineman
Mrs. Joan E. Hekimian
Ms. Janeth C. Hendershot
Joe & Suzanne Henninger
Ms. Vicki R. Herrmann
Mr. William K. Hersey
Ms. Lucinda Anne Hess
Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Heymann
Mrs. Susan L. Higgins
Miss Sharon Hintze
Ms. Sally Hoffman
Dr. Luc Hoffmann
Ms. Barbara Holland
Ms. Elisabeth Holmes
Mr. & Mrs. Paul B. Hood
Mr. William R. Hopping
Ms. Jean A. Horton
Henry & Sharon Hosley
Mrs. Stephanie S. Householder
Ms. Melissa Howard
Mrs. Jeanne Howard
Vernon & Winona Howe
Miss Jean A. Howell
Mr. & Mrs. John K. Howell
Dr. Ronald R. Hoy
Ms. Bette Hoyt
Professor & Ms. Hubert
Ms. Rebecca C. Huddle
Mr. D. S. Hudson, Jr.
Ms. Judith Huf
Ms. Juanita Hummel
Mr. John Humphreys
Mr. Bernard Iliff
W Jackson & Sally Iliff
Paul & Amy Impelluso
Tom & Patsy Inglet
Ms. Carolyn B. Jackson
Kay & Peter Jamieson
Mr. Theodore C. Jarvi
Mrs. Anne K. Jeffrey
Mrs. Beverly S. Jennings
Ms. Frances A. Jewett
Ms. Elizabeth B. Johnson
Ms. Heather Johnson
Diana Atwood Johnson
Ms. Helen Johnson-Leipold &
Mr. Craig Leipold
Mr. Michael C. Johnston
Dr. Karen A. Johnston
Ms. Susan Jones
Colonel Frank Jordan
Mrs. Dorothy Jorgensen
Mr. Lloyd G. Kapp
Mr. Robert Kappmeyer
Ms. Elizabeth Smith Kara
Ms. Amelia W. Katzen
Ms. Barbara J. Keinath
Ms. Sally M. Kendall
Ms. Anne Kenny
Ms. Patricia Kessler
Ms. Maria K. Kiernan
Ms. Sarah J. Kilpatrick
Ms. Phyllis Kind
Ms. Pamela Kindler
Ms. Ilene Klein-Heckscher
Ms. Melody D. Klier
Mr. Don Klotz
Mrs. Wilfred Konneker
Ms. Victoria F. Korth
Ms. Jane Koten
Kevin & Jenifer Kramer
Dr. Stephen Kress
Rudolf & Dagmar Kroc
Robert & Susan Kuehlthau
Mrs. Carol Kueppers
Mr. Mark Kuhns
Ms. Connie Kummer
donors(continued)
Carroll & Jules Labarthe
Mr. Andre G. LaClair
Mrs. Laurel Ladwig
Mrs. Sandy Laughlin
Donald & Deborah Lauper
John & Carol Lawes
Ms. Joni Lehman
Mr. Jay G. Lehman
Ms. Patricia A. Leighfield
Mrs. Arlene G. Leitzke
Mr. David LeMieux
Ms. Roma E. Lenehan
Stephen & Susan Leonard
Ms. Lynn Leopold
Lisa-Marie & Michael Lerner
Ms. Elizabeth A. Levin
Nathaniel & Karen Levy
Mr. & Mrs. Herb A. Lewis
Ms. Sarah Lewis & Ms. Eileen Eglin
Ms. Deborah L. L. Linde
Dr. Sarah A. Lister
Ms. Sarah Locher
Leslie K. Lockard
Mr. Kenneth Lockie
Ms. Linda Logan
Mr. Keith Loring
Dr. Dave Lounsbury
Irby & Heidi Lovette
Dr. Hans-Christian Luedemann
Mrs. Mary Lunt
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Lunt
Alexandra Luther
Ms. Deborah A. Lynch
Ms. Christine Maack
Ms. Sharon Madison
Ms. Karen Madsen
Ms. Nancy Magnusson
Ms. Ann Maine & Mr. Gordon Wood
Mr. Guy E.C. Maitland
Miss Margaret J. Mallette
Ms. C.D. Manwaring
Mr. Evan Marks
Mr. & Mrs. James Marks
Mr. Richard Harold Marks
Mr. Ben & Charles Marn & Mrs.
Kathleen Hawkins
John & Adrienne Mars
Dr. Martina Martin
Ms. Michelle Maton
Mrs. April L. Matthews
Ari Rice
Vincent & Rose Maxwell
Ann Mayer
Ms. Missy Mayfield
Frances & Scott McAdams
McAllen Convention & Visitors Bureau
William & Shirley McAneny
Ms. Betty L. McCurdy
Ms. Mary McDermott
Dr. Patty McGill & Dr. Lynn Kramer
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. McGinnis
Ms. Susan McGreevy
Mr. Timothy McKay
Dr. Mary McKeown-Moak
Donald & Ione McKnight
Mr. John F. McMullan
Ms. Jean McNeill
Ms. Rhoda M. McNitt
David & Julianne Mehegan
Dr. Brian Melito
Finetta Mellish
Mrs. Kathie Menuet
Mr. Ashley Merritt
Dr. Roslyn Meyer
Ms. Mollie L. Meyer
Mrs. Mary Beth Meyer
Mrs. Jennifer E. Michaels
Ms. Madeline Miles
Mr. Earl E. Miller
Dr. Mona Gardner & Ms. Dixie Mills
David & Susan Miska
Ms. Elizabeth Mitchell
Mr. & Mrs. R. G. Mitchell
Mr. Howard W. Mizell & Family
Mr. Steven G. Mlodinow
Mr. Chi Mo
Mr. Roy Molina
Ms. Susan J. Moran
Hildegarde & George Morgan
Dr. James G. Morin & Family
Mr. Thomas Morley
Ms. Jo Ann Morreale
Mr. & Mrs. Joe Moser
Ms. Ursula Muehllehner
Ms. Jerlline Muller
Charles & Carol Mund
Dr. J. Stephen Munzinger
Ms. Mary Lu Murphy
Dr. Robert L. Murry, D.V.M.
Ms. Lora B. Myers
Dr. Lisa B. Nadler
Ms. Natalie H. Nakao
Mr. Howard Naslund
Ms. Judith C. Nelsen
Mr. Lathrop B. Nelson, Jr.
Ms. Nancy Nelson
Klaus & Mary Neuendorf
Dr. Alice Newberry
Charlie Nims
Ms. Susan Nordyke-Smith
19
donors(continued)
Dr. C.J. Norton
Ms. Alice A. Nott
Mrs. Katherine O’Brien
Ms. Judy O’Donovan
Ms. Catherine E. Ogden
Mrs. Judith L. O’Neale
Dr. Edward O’Neil
Mr. Norman Orr
Dr. & Mrs. Hosahalli Padmesh
Mr. Stephen L. Pagans
Mr. C.W. Eliot Paine
Mr. Matthew Palenica
Dr. Lucia F. Palmer
Mr. & Mrs. Francis Pandolfi
Ms. Melinda Papp
Dr. Wendy R. Parish
Mr. Roy H. Park
Mrs. Barbara W. Parson
Mr. Robert E. Parsons
Ms. Edith Pashley
Ms. Marilyn Pasierb
Mr. Robert A. Paul
Mr. John W. Pauley
Dick & Shirley Paulson
Robert & Veronica Petersen
Glenn & Ellen Peterson
Ms. Joann Pettinicchio
Dr. Barbara Phelan & Dr. Carol Reed
Ms. Regina Phelps
Ms. Ruth E. Phillips
Mr. William Phillips & Ms. Barbara Smith
Mr. Barrett W. Pierce
Ms. Antoinette M. Pilzner
Mr. William W. Pinchbeck
Ms. Patricia Poggi
Mrs. Ann P. Porter
Donald & Renate Powers
Ms. Kathryn Powers
Dr. Erika & Michael Pratt
Dr. & Mrs. Eric Preston
Mrs. Lucy D. Preston
Mr. Lou Probst
Ms. Mary Jane Proschel
Mrs. Caren Prothro
Mr. Samuel Radcliffe
Dr. & Mrs. Jan R. Radke
Larry & Mary Ramsey
Mr. Bayard D. Rea
Dr. Mitchell C. Reese
Mr. Paul J. Regan, Jr.
Mr. Paul Regan, III
Dr. Elizabeth A. Reich
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Reilly
Mr. & Mrs. Steven A. Reisinger
Ms. Ginny Remeika
20
Ms. Jane P. Rice
Mr. Leonard Richards & Ms. Maureen
McClure
Mrs. Susan Starr Richards & Mr.
Richard M. Richards
Mr. Thomas F. Richardson
Larry & Margaret Richardson
Mr. Bob Righter
Theodore Robbins
Mrs. Laura N.R. Roberts
Joanne Roberts
Ronald & Katharine Robey
Mr. George Rock
C. Graydon & Mary Rogers
Ms. Ellen Rollins
Ms. Shari Romar
Mr. Robert Rotberg
Ms. Polly Rothstein
Ms. Anne Roughton
Mr. Philip D. Rowe
Ms. Michelle Rozales
Mr. Marvin B. Rubin
Mr. & Mrs. Michael H. Ruden
Virginia Rupert
Ms. Karen L. Ruppert
Professor & Mrs. David Ruppert
Dr. L. Mark Russakoff, M.D.
William Russell
Mr. Gary Rydstrom
Scott & Patricia Sainsbury
Ivan Samuels
Ms. Kathryn Sandacz
Dr. Toni Engst Santmire
Mrs. Sara Saplin
Ms. Georgina C. Scalice
Dr. William E. Schaeffer
Dr. Suanne Schafer
Dr. Alan N. Schechter
Dr. Daniel Scheiman
Ms. Noelle Schlette
Dr. Ruth E. Schmitter
Terry Schroeder
Ms. Sue Schulgin
Mr. Kurt R. Schwarz
Mr. Mitchel E. Schwass
Tim & Judith Sear
Ms. Barbara Searles
Ms. Sandra Sedillos
Ms. Mary Lee Seitz
Mr. Christopher Selley & Ms. Nocole
Luecke
Mr. Jack A. Sellinger
Dr. Paul Serridge
Ms. Joyce Servidio
Ms. Lisa Seshens
Greg & Patti Seymour
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Shanahan
Mr. Stephen Shaner
Ms. Victoria Shaw
Mr. John T. Shaw
Mr. Douglas Sheldon
Ms. Cynthia Shereda
Mrs. Linda W. Siecke
Mrs. Joan Siedenburg
Ms. Barbara J. Siepierski
Katharine B. Simonds
Mr. Leroy W. Sinclair
Ms. Judy Singer
Mr. & Mrs. William Sloan
Ms. Mary Sly
Mrs. Marjorie Smart & Mr. Robert Camp
Mr. David B. Smingler
David & Karen Smith
Mr. James Smith
Dr. Orlando C. Snead
Ms. Karen Solem
Mr. James Sollins
Dr. Sonja Sorbo
Mr. Jonathan F. Soule
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Spencer
Ms. Barbara Spitz
Ms. Mary St. George
Mr. Charles St. John
Mark Stanback
Dr. Jeanne M. Stellman
Ms. Brooke Stevens
Dr. Pamela Stewart
Mr. James R. Stewart, Jr.
Mr. Larry Stillman
Ms. Kay Stocker
Ms. Virginia K. Stowe
Mr. Jim Strachan
Steven & Alexis Strongin
Dr. Stephen D. Stroupe
Ms. Paula Stuart
Ms. Dorothy J. Stumpf
Ms. Joanna Sturm
Steve & Beth Suddaby
Ms. Virginia M. Sullivan
Ms. Eugenia Summer
Ms. Julia Swords
Mr. David M. Taggart
Mrs. Mary Tannen
Dr. Michael G. Tannenbaum
Mr. David P. Tapscott
Mrs. Nancy E. Tarkenton
Ms. Donna E. Tatro
Ms. Lili Taylor
Ms. Marie Terlizzi & Mr. Robert Dobbs
The Garden Club of America
Ms. Patricia A. Thomas
Mr. & Mrs. Joe Thomas
Ms. Carol Thompson
Ms. Mary D. Thompson
TOSA Foundation
Ms. Robin Tost
Ms. Marjorie Toth
Ms. Barbara J. Trask
Charles Trautmann
Ms. Michaeleen Trimarchi
Mr. Richard Tuckerman
Ms. Rebecca Tulloch
Ms. Alice H. Turk
Ms. Alison Van Dyke
Mr. Nicholas Van Plew
Mr. Mark Vander Hart
Mr. Alison E. VanKeuren
Lesley Varga
Ms. Lyda Vellekoop
Ms. Karlene Wadleigh
Ms. Rose Wadsworth
Florian & Shelley Walchak
Mrs. Diane T. Walker
Mr. William Wallis
Dorris Wampler
Ms. Michelle E. Watkins
Dr. Arnold N. Weinberg
Ms. Georgia E. Welles
Dr. & Mrs. John W. Wesner, Jr.
Mr. Robert Wessels
Mr. & Mrs. D.B. Wetherell, Jr.
Ms. Susan L. Whaley
Carol & Owen Whitby
Mr. David White
Dr. Stephen M. White
Ms. Emily B. White
Dr. T.W. White-Henry
Anji White
Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation
Wild Birds Unlimited in Saratoga Springs
Mr. William Wilkinson & Ms. Janet Dale
Mrs. Carolyn Will
Ms. Diane Willey
Ms. Sally Williams
Mr. Stefan T. Williams
Dr. & Mrs. Hibbard E. Williams
Williams Family Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Willis
Katharine Wilson
Mrs. Marillyn B. Wilson
Ms. Bonnie Wilson
Ms. Anna Winand
Mrs. Sheryl Winter
Mrs. Melanie Wirtanen
Ms. Deborah Wishner
Mr. & Mrs. Peter H. Wolfe
Mr. Peter Wolfe
Ms. Marina Wolkonsky
Professor Robert L. Wolpert
Mrs. Marilyn M. Woodhouse
Dennis & Laura Woodside
Mr. Duane Woofter
Ms. Mary P. Wright
Ms. Donna L. Yee
Ms. Catherine Yerzley
Ms. Lisa D. Yntema
Mr. Merle E. Yoder
Mr. Dan Young
Mr. & Mrs. James D. Young
Owen & Linda Youngman
Dr. Andrea A. Zachary
Ms. Paula Zebrowski
David & Cherie Zelinger
Ms. Cathleen S. Zepelin
Erika Zetty & Phillip Martin
Ms. Elizabeth H. Zimmerman
Matching Gifts
3M Foundation
Abbott Laboratories
Adobe Systems
Aetna Foundation
Aetna, Inc
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.
AkzoNobel
American International Group, Inc
American Transmission Company
Aon Corporation
Apple Computers Inc
Argonaut Group, Inc.
Artio Global Management LLC
Assurant Matching Gift Company
AT&T Foundation
BAE Systems, Matching Gift Program
Bank of America Foundation
Bank of the West
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Matching Gift Program
Boeing Company
BP Foundation, Inc.
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Cambia Employee Giving
ChevronTexaco Corporation
Chubb Corporation
Clorox Company
Coca-Cola Foundation
Computer Associates International
Con Edison Company
ConocoPhillips
Cooper Industries, Inc.
Corning Incorporated
Dollar Bank Matching Gift Company
Eaton Corporation
Eli Lilly & Company Foundation
ExxonMobil Foundation
General Electric Company
General Mills Foundation
GlaxoSmithKline
Global Impact
Goodrich Corporation Foundation
Google Matching Gift Program
Harris Foundation Corporation
Heinz Company Foundation
Hershey Foods Corporation
Hewlett Packard Company
HSBC Bank USA
IBM Corporation
Intel Corporation
John Hancock Financial Services, Inc.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Johnson & Johnson
JP Morgan Chase Foundation
Kimberly-Clark Foundation
KPMG-Matching Gift Company
Kresge Foundation
LabCorp
Land O’Lakes, Inc.
Law School Admission Council
Lockheed Martin
Macy’s Inc. Matching Gift
MasterCard International, Inc.
McKesson Corporation Foundation
Merck Company Foundation
Metropolitan Life Foundation
Microsoft Corporation
Minerals Technologies, Inc.
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
Mondelez International, Inc.
Monsanto Company
Moody’s Foundation
Motorola Foundation
Munich Reinsurance America, Inc.
Nintendo of America, Inc.
NRG Energy, Inc.
Orvis-Perkins Foundation
Pacific Life
Patagonia—Subsidiary of Lost Arrow Corp.
Penn Virginia Corporation
PepsiCo Foundation, Inc.
Pew Charitable Trusts
Pfizer, Inc
Pioneer Hi-Bred International
PPG Industries Foundation
Principal Financial Group Fdn.
Procter & Gamble Company
Prudential Insurance Foundation
Random House Matching Gift Company
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Rockwell Collins
Salesforcefoundation
Security Mutual Life Insurance
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Starbucks Coffee Company
Tyco Electronics Corp
United Technologies Corporation
UnumProvident Corporation
Verizon Foundation
Wells Fargo Bank
Wells Fargo Foundation
Williams Companies
Wisconsin Energy Corporation
Xerox Corporation
Sapsucker Woods Society
Recognizing all friends
who have included the
Lab in their estate plans,
past and present
Mr. Sal Acosta and Ms. Suzanne
Hutchinson
Mr. Charles S. Adams
Ms. Louise Addis
Ms. Diane Adkin
Ann and Philip Aines
Albrecht Estate
Mr. John E. Alexander
Russell and Barbara Allison
Mrs. Helga N. Alten
Mr. Elwin F. Anderson
Ms. Bertha Andrew
Mrs. Patricia L. Angotti
Mrs. Sue D. Ansley
Bill and Katherine Atterbury
Terry Auld
Ms. Katharine M. Aycrigg
Ms. Judith M. Bajoris
Ms. Madge Baker
Mr. & Mrs. Konrad Bald
Ms. Marjorie L. Barrows
Mrs. John F. Barry
Ms. Margaret R. Barton
Mrs. Karen F. Beall
Mrs. John Wilhelmine Behnken
Mrs. James (Dorothy) W. Bell
Mr. Joseph Benner
Mrs. Brenda J. Best
Mr. Mark J. Bilak & Family
Mrs. Janet Blam
Ms. Marie Bocca
Ms. Susan D. Boettger
Mrs. James C. H. Bonbright
Ms. Ann Bregman
Dr. Joan Brenchley-Jackson
Sandra and Jeff Bricker
Ms. Irene Brown
Ms. Becky A. Brown
Dr. Robert E. Brown
Ms. Cori A. Brown
Ms. Betty A. Bruhns
Mr. Gregory Brumfield
Ms. Michele Burlew and Mr. John Bauhs
Ms. Gretchen L. Burmeister
Ms. Frances Burnett
Ms. Colette A. Burrus
Dr. & Mrs. David L. Call
Mrs. Mary Josephine Campbell
Ms. Eleanor R. Campbell
Dr. Alvin R. Carpenter
Mr. Fred Carr
Carol and Daniel Cash
Ms. Kathaleen A. Cattieu
Mr. Dwight R. Chamberlain
Ms. Joyce W. Cima
Clarann Estate
Ms. Patricia Collins
Ms. Joyce F. Colwell
Ms. Beth Cooper
Ms. Joan Cordle
Mrs. Mary E. Cost
Mr. William Powell Cottrille
Mrs. Virginia R. Crocker
Ms. Ruth Cummings
Peter and Rhoda Curtiss
Ms. Cornelia Daley and Mr. Phil Cowan
Mr. Michael Damer
Randi and L. Van Dauler
Ms. Martha E. Day
Mr. Vernon D. Dayhoff
Ms. Nancy A. deGroff
Mrs. Vicki DeLoach
Mrs. Ruth D. Dillon
Ms. Doris B. Donk
Mr. and Mrs. V. Richard Eales
Stephen and Betty Eaton
Estate of Michael Barton Eddy
Ms. Norma Edsall
Ms. Frances J. Ehlers
Leonard Eiserer
Mrs. George B. Emeny
Mr. and Mrs. Roger H. Farrell
Ms. Elizabeth E. Fay
Rita M. Fetter
Ms. June M. Ficker
Mr. Robert T. Foote ‘39
Dr. Kathy Freas
Mr. William F. Fuerst, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Laurance Fuller
Mr. Robert Garbacz
Mrs. Esther B. Garnsey
Mr. Donald P. Garrett
Ms. Paula Gills
Vincent and Ann Marie Glaviano
Mrs. Emily R. Glover
Ms. Doris Goldstein
Mr. Alfred H. Gray
John and Suzanne Gregoire
Mr. William Anson Grover, Sr.
Ms. Joan M. Guerin
Mrs. Suzanne O. Happeny
Ms. Marjorie Harbin
Ms. Karen E. Harris
Duncan and Adrienne Hartley
Lynn Hassler
Jane and Gerry Haviland
Ms. Lisa Hayes
Sheila Harrah Hearne Estate
Harry Heidt Estate
Ms. Phyllis Henney Estate
Joe and Suzanne Henninger
Dr. Linda J. Himot
Mrs. Leona S. Hine
Ms. Mary P. Hines
Mr. Ray Hinkle
Mr. Frederick Hoch
Ms. Barbara Holtz
Ms. Jean A. Horton
Henry and Sharon Hosley
Mr. John Huppler
James and Roberta Hutchison
Mr. Bernard Iliff
Tom and Patsy Inglet
Mr. Isidor Jeklin
Mrs. Imogene P. Johnson
Mr. Michael C. Johnston
Ms Nora W Jones
Ms. Nora Jones
Mr. James A Jordan
Mrs. Judith M. Joy
Mrs. Judith M. Kay
Mrs. Blanche Kelly
Mr. David Keyes and Ms. Penelope
Hillemann
Mrs. T. Spencer Knight
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Knox
Linda F. Kramer
Dr. Samuel Kramer
Mr. Harold E. Kubly
Mr. Norman C. Lantz
Mr. Robert J. Laskowski
Howard and Sydney Leach
Marian Legg
Georgina Lentini
Dr. Carol Letendre
Ms. Marjorie Lewin
Ms. Bertha A. Lewis
Eric and Constance Lincke
Mr. Richard and Mrs. Mae Livesey
Ms. Catherine Lomuscio
Mr. C. James Luther
Mrs. Madeline Lutz
Mr. and Mrs. William Macaulay
Mr. J De Navarre Macomb, Jr.
Ms. Marion Mascari
Ms. Mary Mauel
Ms. Claudia Mayfield
Mr. William McCarthy
Mr. Richard G. McClung
Ms. Mary Ellen McCrossen
Ms. Betty L. McCurdy
Mr. Everett G. McDonough, Jr.
Ms. Margaret J. McDowell
Ms. Winifred McDowell and Mr. John Follett
Dr. Ann J. McGarvey, D.D.S.
Mrs. D. M. McKee
Mrs. Elizabeth A. McLaren
Ms. Carol McQuade
Mrs. Nancy Menefee
Mr. Harry Merker
Mr. John P. Merrill
Ms. R. Rosalie Metzger
Ms. Marinia Michalec
Dr. Norman S. Moore
Mr. Frederick Morelle
Hildegarde and George Morgan
Mr. John A-X Morris
Mr. David David Morris
Marcia and Thomas Morton
Penny and Don Moser
Ms. Ursula Muehllehner
Ms. Rita J. Myrick
Ellen Nagler
Ms. Mildred E. Neff
Gary Neuman and Julie West
Mr. Gary l. Newkirk
Dr. Polly G. Nicely
Mr. Alphonse R. Normandia
Mrs. Judith L. O’Neale
Mr. Stephen B. Oresman
Mrs. Mary A. Oster
Ms. Julie Oxford
Ms. Patricia Packer
Mr. Thomas R. Palmer
Ms. Virginia Panarace Estate
Mrs. Ellen S. Parkes
Ms. Joanne Parrott
donors(continued)
Ms. Ellen I. Paul
Ms. Esther A. Pearlman
Dr. & Mrs. William D. Peterson
Mr. George M. Pflaumer
Mr. William Phillips and Ms. Barbara Smith
Professor Elmer S. Phillips
Ms. Lauren Pickard
Mr. Richard F. Pietsch
Ms. Marjorie A. Pitts
Jose Pizarro
Mr. Zoltan Porga
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R. Porter
Mr. Richard Pough
Albert and Diane Puff
James and Valorie Ramakka
Ms. Alice M. Rand
Ms. Hazel E. Reed
Ms. April L. Reese
Mr. Paul J. Regan, Jr.
Ms. Louise Reisch
Ms. Rachel T. Renaud
Dr. Laurie Renz
Ms. Frances M. Rew
Ms. Kathleen Rhodes
Mrs. Susan Starr Richards and Mr. Richard
M. Richards
Roger and Betty Robb
Mrs. Eleanor Robbins
Mr. Chandler Robbins
Mr. William R. Robertson
Mr. Stan Rodwin
Mr. Thomas W. Rogers Estate
Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Rose III
Mrs. Jeanette G. Rosenberger
Ms. Martha Rouin
Elizabeth and Jean Rowley
Ms. Gayle Russell
Mrs. Lynette Russo
Dr. William L. Rutherford
Ms. Suzanne Rutter
Mr. Richard Sanders and Ms. Janice Hand
Mrs. and Mr. Allison Savage-Cairns
Mr. Richard Scales
Ms. Lynne R. Scheer
Dr. Francis G. Scheider, M.D.
Richard and Janey Schnoor
Ms. Ellen M. Schopp
Mr. Robert F. Schumann
Ms. Paula M. Schutte
Ms. Monica J. Schwalbach
Robert and Nancy Searjeant
Drs. Sheldon and Lucia Severinghaus
Betty and Jim Shannon
Ms. Helen R. Shaskan
Mrs. Mary S. Shaub
Mrs. Alice M. Shaw
Dr. Richard S. Shirley
Mr. Richard J Siewers
Ms. Mindy Simon
Mrs. Carol U. Sisler
Bernie and Mary Slofer
Ms. Victoria Slowik
Mrs. Marjorie Smart and Mr. Robert Camp
Mrs. Emily C. Smith
Ms. Marybeth Sollins
Michael and Jean Stahnke
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth T. Steadman
Mr. David Stein
Barry and Sandy Stevenson
Mr. William R. Stewart
Mr. James R. Stewart, Jr.
Ms. Pamela J. Story
Mr. Edward P. Street, Jr.
Mrs. Lyman K. Stuart
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Stuart
Ms. Ingrid Sunzenauer
Mr. Scott Sutcliffe
Mr. Robert Swift
Ms. Donna E. Tatro
Mrs. Nancy Thomas
Mr. John H. Thomson
Mrs. Amanda Thurber
Mrs. Phyllis Tillinghast
Elizabeth Todd
Mr. Charles E. Treman, Jr.
Reverend Barbara B. Triggs
Mrs. Mary Van Vleck
Ms. Charlotte Vaughn
Ms. Shirley A. Victor
Mrs. Mary Clare Ward
Mrs. E.R. Webster
Mrs. Madelon G. Wehner
Ms. Mariellen Whelan
Ms. Jeanne A. White
Mrs. Jeanne D. Wigen-Ayers
Dr. Andrea Wiggins
Ms. Hazel L. Wilbur
Mr. Robert G. Williams
Mr. Stefan T. Williams
Ms. Patricia Wolff
Mrs. Louise W. Woodruff
Mrs. Shirley S. Woods
Dr. Jane E. Woods
Ms. Jeannie B. Wright
Mrs. Barbara Wright
Mr. L. Christopher Wright
Carolyn Wynne
Mrs. Clara Taylor Yager
Dr. Paula Yellin
Mr. James Younger
21
donors(continued)
Mrs. Corinne Mistretta
Dr. Robert D. Harwick
Dr. Chester Martin, Jr.
Mr. Robert D. Harwick Jr.
Dr. Jean C. Harwick
Dr. Florian Henke
Ms. Naomi H. Bender
Elsie Helzer
Ms. Maxine McCall
Mr. George W. Zepko
Ms. Dorothy N. Zirkle
Mr. Matthew Robbins
Willse Bolling
Ms. Marjorie Friedlander
Mr. Bolling Willse, Sr.
Gifts in Honor of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Rose III
Karl and Mollie Butler
Dr. Dennis Skalka
Dr. David Carpenter
Mr. & Mrs. James Marks
Orville Chapman
Dr. & Mrs. Darwin Ferry
Mr. Ferris Akel III
Ms. Mary Monson
Mrs. Patricia Langan
Ms. Melissa I. Whitmire
Mrs. Sandy Laughlin
Mrs. Caren Prothro
Butler Family Foundaiton
Ken and Anne Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph S. Little
Mr. and Mrs. David Junkin
Mary F. Bell
Mr. Jack Sattel and Mrs. Karen Sattel
Community Foundation of Louisville
Gina and Nico Zappia
Greg Budney
Alison Cairns
Mrs. Margaret Childers
Ms Nina Martin
Emma Conkle’s Birthday
Mr. Ed Scholes
Mrs. Susan Chapman
Richard Cliggott
Mr. Walter G. Bruska
Julia Cole
Mr. Timothy A. Burr
Mr. and Mrs. Ian Condra
Ms. Patricia M. Sheperd
Erin Fowler
Lorinda and Richard Kendrick
Mr. Herbert Hachler
Janet Gardner—Hours spent for
Project FeederWatch
Mr. and Mrs. John Long
Ms. Catherine Duncan and Ms. C.
Westbrook Nanna
Mrs. Nancy Boyd
Ms. Meredith I. Raine
Helen and Thomas Brannagan
Mr. and Mrs. David Beck
Mrs. Carol Abell
Mrs. Jane Hagedorn
Mr. Brad Walker
D1 and D3
Northrop Grumman Foundation
Dr. Deanna Gomby
Mrs. Margaret Childers
Mr. Scott Haber
Rebecca and William Parkin
Mr. Brian Haskett
Ms. Kathy Odendahl
Ms. Mary P. Hines
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Nebenzahl
Ms. Alice Pirie Wirtz
Mr. & Mrs. Paul B. Hood
Henry and Eleanor Hood
Dylan Jansen
Ms. Katherine M. Jansen-Byrkit
Mrs. Imogene P. Johnson
Mrs. Dorothy M. Constantine
Ms. Carol Krist and Mr. Paul Alpers
Dr. Susan C. Bourque
Steve and Marie Pardi
Grace Johnson
Katharine Payne
Dr. Clare Fewtrell
Mr. Fred Powell
David Parish
Mrs. Anne E. Putnam
Mr. Peter Canby
Ms. Beverly Quinlan
Mary and Joseph Hughes
22
Rose Bianconi
Mr. Scott Sutcliffe
Mr. and Mrs. David Junkin
Erick Greene & Heiko Langner—
Osprey Project
Rebecca and William Parkin
Mrs. Delores Williams
Mr. Richard Williams
Mrs. Ann Battle
Ms. Andrea Kulick
Mrs. Jonnel Covault
Ms. Mary E. Winston
Joanne Doll
Rebecca and William Parkin
Ms. Sherie Dunagan
Rosalyn Zalutsky
Ruth Dugan
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Richard Halberstadt
Jonah Zuckerman’s Bar Mitzvah
Ms. Maureen Dugan
Dr. and Mrs. Sam Dugan
Ms. Julie Katz
Ms. Julie Burg
Dr. Wendy Greenspun
Mr. Jeffrey Sprung
Mr. Ian Harvey
Mrs. Lisa Porad
Mr. Eli Pristoop
Burton H. Entrekin
Gifts in Memory of
Reverend Peter Bridgford
Dr. Chester A. Albosta, Jr.
Lynn Ryan
Emily and Marybeth Kozar
Ms. Arlene Gray and Ms. Patricia Hall
Mr. Dean Heath
Mr. Glenn Middleton
Mike and Alice McMahon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Albosta
Mr. Paul J. Bartishevich
Ms. Marilyn Rowland
Mrs. Barbara Berenfield
Mr. Leonard Berenfield
Mrs. Harriet Bernhardt
Ms. Barbara Bernhardt
Hollie and Charles Pettit
Clara Euker
Diane and David Brunworth
Bruce Fetz
John and Bonnie Strand
Janet Rice French
Mr. and Mrs. Buschmann
Judy Farrell
Ms. Helen Dreibelbis
Ms. Dorothy Neely
Mr. Scott Douglass
Mr. Michael Kozikowski
Ms. Christine Bailey
Mr. Sherburne Jamison
Mike and Sharon Saunders
Ruth Kiligas
Margaret and Truman Moon
Jean Johnson
Ludwig Kempe
Ann Kendall
Julia Cooke Gle
Stephen and Andrea Cohen
Mrs. Anne J. Guettler
Scott and Karen Harder
Gove Norman Hambridge
Mrs. Mary N. Hambidge
Mrs. Jane Smiley Hart
Ms. Diane Borst and Mr. Robert
Horowits
Ms. Mary M. Schultz
Ms. Mimi Bussan
Ms. Nancy Shor
Ms. Lucile R. Finn
Ms. Ellen G. Sampson
David and Mary Curtiss
Kim and Shari Muller
Mrs. Mary Kadish
C. Sheldon Seibel
Ms. Norma Parker & Family
Mrs. Shirley Seibel
Mr. Rainey Taylor
Virginia Kingsolver
Paul Mundinger
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ware
Ms. Patricia Dowdell
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley L. Njaa
Dr. Royse P. Murphy
Ms. Tamesin L. Eustis
Mr. & Mrs. Brian C. Myres
Ruth Kipploa
Mr. Frederick Kippola
Mrs. Margaret Nichols
Ms. Deborah Cipolla-Dennis
Fred and Mary Widding
Robert Klages
Ms. Marilyn Mehr
Ms. Lynn Niedenthal
Ms. Nancy Ordman
Ms. Julie Holsenbeck
Mrs. Theresa A. Winer
Marcia and Thomas Morton
Ms. Margaret Hallyburton
Mr. Chris DeBottis
Ms. Diana Drucker
Mrs. Marta Neuman Larsson
Mrs. Margareta Levy
Mr. Horace Latimer
Dr. & Mrs. John B. Wood
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Richard
Halberstadt
Donald Robert Mott
Fidelity Charitable Gift
Ms. Mary Mundinger
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Block
Ms. Margaret F. Wihtol
Ms. Catherine Mulholland
Mr. Frederic A. Williams
John Pennywitt
Ms. Mary P. Lester
Mrs. Eleanor Penrose
Stephen Penrose
Inez Rafaeli
Ms. Doris Rafaeli
Virginia W. Raynor
Mr. Robert Heine
Ms. Jean M Whitehead
Penn Virginia Corporation
Alice A. Robinson
Ms. Bonnie Dixon
Hollie and Charles Pettit
Susan Rosa Rydalch
Dr. Everett C. Short Jr.
Ms. Harriet Strain
Dave Swormstedt
Mrs. and Mr. Winifred Swormstedt
Anne Walker Terry
Timothy and Christina Palmer
Mr. & Mrs. Dan Collins
Greg Frost
Daniel and Anne Kenlon
Daniel Pierce
Student Affairs Administration
Program at Binghamton Univ.
H. J. Terry
Michelle Sardella and Tony Alise
Miss Courtney Wilson
Ms. Joanna Grosodonia
Ms. Roberta Palmiotto
Ms. Alice Gomez
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Randall
Mrs. Ruth Morton
Ms. Michelle E. Watkins
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Cody
Sponsors
Dr. Lavern Timmer
Jack McCarthy
Ms. Marcy J. Singer
Ronald and Nancy Clemens
Ms. Patricia Cox
Mrs. Susan Werntgen
Charles Geanangel
William Giezendanner
Dr. Donald C. Samson, Sr.
The Cornell Lab thanks our sponsors for their support in 2013. Through these partnerships we
reached out to even broader audiences to improve the understanding and protection of birds in
backyards and around the world. Thank you!
Bob’s Red Mill
ZEISS
Droll Yankees Inc.
OpticsPlanet, Inc.
Pennington® Wild Bird Feed
Pine Tree Farms, Inc.
Red River Commodities
Wild Birds Unlimited, Inc.
Wild Birds Unlimited at
Sapsucker Woods
For more information about corporate sponsorship opportunities, contact Mary Guthrie,
director of corporate marketing partnerships, at [email protected].
Fiscal Year 2013
T
he Cornell Lab of Ornithology takes great pride
in the stewardship of your gifts.
Together with a growing group of generous
members and donors, the Cornell Lab continues to build sustainable programs and promote
global conservation through science and education. We work hard to keep administrative costs
as low as possible and invest our valuable human
and financial resources in building high-quality
research and education programs.
Thank you for your trust and support which enable us to advance knowledge, build technologies,
and strengthen conservation initiatives around
the world.
Financial Report
(July 1, 2012—June 30, 2013)
FY13 EXPENDITURES
FY13 REVENUES
•2.45%
7.48%
12.59%
12.0%
12.8%
•3.55% 39.15%
75.2%
34.78%
Membership and Gifts............................$8,830,528
Program................................................ $17,390,032
Grants and Contracts..............................$7,845,184
Administration.........................................$2,964,426
Program Income......................................$2,839,594
Development...........................................$2,769,612
Invested Funds Income...........................$1,686,391
Total Expenditures................................$23,124,070
Gifts Directed to Investment Funds..........$800,000
Other...........................................................$552,432
Total Revenue.......................................$22,554,129
25
Millions of dollars
20
Front cover: Golden-winged Warbler by Gerrit Vyn
Back cover: Early successional habitat for
Golden-winged Warblers by Laurie Johnson
Graphic design: Joanne Avila
Annual Operating Revenue and Expense, 2005–2013
Gifts Directed to Invested Funds
Operating Revenue
Expense
15
10
5
0
FY2005
FY2006
FY2007
FY2008
FY2009
FY2010
FY2011
FY2012
FY2013